| Greenland suffers from extreme ice melt  An international team of scientists, led by Dr Edward Hanna at the 
    University of Sheffield, has demonstrated that recent warm summers have 
    caused the most extreme Greenland ice melting in 50 years. The new research 
    provides further evidence of a key impact of global warming and helps 
    scientists place recent satellite observations of Greenland's shrinking ice 
    mass in a longer-term climatic context.
 Dr Hanna of the University's Department of Geography, alongside some of the 
    World's leading Greenland glaciologists and climatologists, analysed a 
    combination of key meteorological and glaciological records spanning a 
    number of decades as part of the research.
 
 The findings, published in Journal of Climate, show how the Greenland Ice 
    Sheet responded to more regional, rather than global, changes in climate 
    between the 1960s and early 1990s. However the last fifteen years has seen 
    an increase in ice melting and a striking correspondence of Greenland with 
    global temperature variations, demonstrating Greenland's recent response to 
    global warming.
 
 Summer 2003 was exceptionally warm around the margins of the Greenland Ice 
    Sheet, which resulted in the second-highest meltwater running off from the 
    Ice Sheet of the last 50 years. Summer 2005 experienced a record-high melt, 
    which was very recently superseded in summer 2007 , a year almost as warm as 
    2003.
 
 The team of researchers includes some of the leading Greenland glaciologists 
    and climatologists from the Free University of Brussels, University of 
    Colorado, Danish Meteorological Institute and NASA Goddard Earth Science and 
    Technology Center, University of Maryland Baltimore County, as well as four 
    members of the University of Sheffield.
 
 Dr Edward Hanna said: "Our work shows that global warming is beginning to 
    take its toll on the Greenland Ice Sheet which, as a relict feature of the 
    last Ice Age, has already been living on borrowed time and seems now to be 
    in inexorable decline. The question is can we reduce greenhouse-gas 
    emissions in time to make enough of a difference to curb this decay?"
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